Wall Street may get some relief this week, as investors await fresh insight on the health of the US economy. But the market is still facing some major head winds, with oil prices surging and the race for the White House heating up.

Signs that the economic recovery grew a bit sluggish this summer have weighed on investor sentiment over the past month, helping send major market gauges back toward their lowest levels of the year.

Wall Street has largely brushed off corporate America's strong second-quarter results, and tepid forecasts from company managements have done little to quell fears that profits are poised to slow in the remaining months of the year.

The rebound in stocks last week, however, has given investors hope that the market is finding its footing. And reports on the labor market and the manufacturing sector this week may offer some reassurance that the economic deceleration was only temporary.

Earlier last month, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan offered an optimistic view of the economy, saying that the strong pace of growth is sustainable this year and the next, with little risk of inflation.

"The real questions that face the market are: Is Alan Greenspan right? Was June transitory? And will the economy start to improve in the third quarter?" said Hugh Johnson, chief investment officer at First Albany Corp.

Wall Street will get some help answering those questions next week when the Institute for Supply Management issues its monthly report on the manufacturing sector today. The survey is expected to show a slight rise in July to 62 from 61.1 in June.

But this week's main economic event happens on Friday, when the government issues monthly payrolls data for July.

Economists polled by Reuters are expecting the report to show that the economy created about 228,000 jobs this month, following a gain of about 112,000 in June. The unemployment rate is expected to remain steady at 5.6 per cent.

One of Wall Street's big worries has been that a slowdown in employment growth could prompt consumers, faced with potential joblessness, to curb their spending - a force that powers about two-thirds of US growth.

"That's going to go to the heart of what people think about how the economy's doing," said Henry Herrmann, chief investment officer at Waddell & Reed. "If we get a strong payroll number, people will be a little more confident about the consumer hanging in there, and we might get some more optimistic adjustments to people's thinking."

Stocks surged last week as investors snapped up shares that were battered in about a month of brutal losses. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose about 1.4 per cent in the past week, snapping a six-week string of declines.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 1.8 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite Index rose 2.1 per cent.

The S&P 500 tumbled 3.4 per cent in July, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 7.8 per cent, their biggest one-month decreases since December 2002. The blue-chip Dow fell 2.8 per cent, its largest one-month decline since January 2003.

Earnings reports will begin to taper off this week. But results are due from a few of Wall Street's marquee names, including Procter & Gamble, R.J. Reynolds and CVS Corp.

Financial services company Prudential Financial is expected to issue its quarterly earnings report, as well as telephone company Qwest Communications International.

About 80 per cent of the companies in the S&P 500 have issued their earnings so far, and, when all is said and done, they are expected to show a 25 per cent gain in year-over-year profits, according to Reuters Research.

Relief that the earnings season is nearly over and that the Democratic National Convention has gone by without a major hitch could give stocks a boost in the next few days, said Edgar Peters, chief investment officer at PanAgora Asset Management.

"The market is oversold right now," Mr Peters said. "It's about as undervalued as it was a year ago last March, and we had a significant rise after that."

Still, uncertainty over a number of issues, including the upcoming US presidential election and skyrocketing oil prices, could easily limit any gains the market makes.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, September crude jumped to a session high of $43.85 a barrel on Friday, a new record in the NYMEX contract's 21-year history. NYMEX September crude settled at $43.80 a barrel, up $1.05.

Investors also will be closely following President George W. Bush and Democratic rival John Kerry on the campaign trail, trying to sort out what the policies in their platforms will mean for the market.

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